A psychiatric emergency clinic: a study of attendances over six months

MH Lim�- The British Journal of Psychiatry, 1983 - cambridge.org
MH Lim
The British Journal of Psychiatry, 1983cambridge.org
Two thousand three hundred and ninety consecutive visits to a walk-in psychiatric
emergency service were studied to examine issues relevant to service provision. Only a third
of patients were from the catchment area. Psychotic patients and those admitted or kept
overnight (guests) were more frequent after hours and among non-medical referrals,
especially family and police referrals; but suicidal patients often came from other hospitals.
At index visit a third of patients were offered follow-up, but attendance was poor. Factors�…
Two thousand three hundred and ninety consecutive visits to a walk-in psychiatric emergency service were studied to examine issues relevant to service provision. Only a third of patients were from the catchment area. Psychotic patients and those admitted or kept overnight (guests) were more frequent after hours and among non-medical referrals, especially family and police referrals; but suicidal patients often came from other hospitals. At index visit a third of patients were offered follow-up, but attendance was poor. Factors influencing attendance were examined. Keeping overnight avoided unnecessary admissions. There was little evidence that patients abused the service.The findings suggest that a psychiatric emergency service should be available to all referrals 24 hours a day.
Cambridge University Press